Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 September 1939 — Page 2
OF C. REPORT OPPOSES GROUP , HOSPITAL PLAN
Committee Urges Private|g
Firms Be Used to Furnish Insurance. |
(Continued from Page One)
in case of extensive local epidemics
- Or disasters.” . 4A bill, sponsored hy Indiana medcal’. -and hospital associations, to provide for establishment of community non-profit hospital service under State Insurance Department supervision, was passed by the last Legislature
It was declared unconstitutional | .
by . the Attorney General “on the grounds that the title of the bill did not .cover sufficiently the provision of the act,” the report stated.
Governor M. Clifford Townsend |§
vetoed the bill. He appointed a committee June 23 to plan for estahblishing group hospitalization under existing laws, but the committee recommended postponement. of any. action until the next Legisla-
Dr. Norman M. Beatty is Cham-
Harrell and Dr. Russell S. Henry|: are vice chairmen. Dr. Beatty, |§
James H. Ruddell and Wendell P.
Coler are members of the subcom-
mittee which prepared ithe report. The boarc. of directors @approved it. There are 41 private insurance
companies licensed in Indiana to is-|&i
sue casualty plans against costs of _. hospitalization, the report stated. “There are no community hospital service plans in operation, although a step in that direction has been taken recently.” The Public Health Committee said it compared the Association Hospital Service of New York, a community group, and an insurance
company which it did not identify. |
It reached these conclusions: ‘1. “For a lower monthly rate it (community hospital . service) pro-| vides benefits for the entire family while the insurance company places age limits upon the insured, particularly children, and charges the same rate for each individual in the family. It is this family coverage feature which is pointed out as one most favorable for general accept-| arice of the community hospital service plan because it offers a - monthly rate more favorable to the man who needs insurance against hcsphalization most. 2. “Under the community service plan, the hospital is a direct party to_the contract and receives direct 1y the benefits for services rendered. Under the insurance company plan, the cash indemnity is paid to the insured. It is left to the hospital to collect the bill or secure an assignment of the indemnity once the benefits become definitely known. As a social service institution, hespitals carry a large amount of charitable and benevolent work, financed largely from endowments which, with other forms of_income, have decreased so materially during recent years as to place many hospitals in difficult ‘financial straits:
2 7 * Discusses Rate Setting
3. “The matter of rates would be an important consideration of the employee with a family and also for tHe employer considering the establishment of group hospital insurance plan in his business for the benefit of his employees. It is not, however, the sole consideration. 4. “Rates established in many inShion: (in community hospital insurance) are not sufficient to cover claims. Hospital insurance is a comparatively new endeavor, extending back for only five or six years. - This short span of time hardly warrants a long enough experience pon which ‘both insurance and hospital service plans can jaccurately ‘base rates. This is particularly true where a large number of “women are -insured. 5. “The private insurance company. is bound under insurance laws by the terms of its contract. Regardless of the adequacy of rates, the- justified claim must be paid. Any difference is made up from reserves or guarantee funds of the insurance company. The community hospital service plan—in the face of inadequate premiums or too expensive . coverage—may reduce benefits paid to the hospitals. In the face of increasing financial difficulties, [the Associated Hospital Service of New York recently announced that it was forced to cut benefits by 25 per cent.
Considers Stability of Plan
“iB. “It is said that the reduction fi: benefits made by these community plans will not affect the -sfgtus of the insured, since the hos1 must fulfill its obligations and up to the terms of the contfgct. It is extremely doubtful that sich a condition could long be contihued. 4. “To the employers considerig the adoption of group hospital fAsurance for their employees, the stability of the plan is a matter of utmost importance. Obviously, any reductions in benefits or increase pres following a period of finanstress or. the part of the insurer is liable to reflect against the Ly and integrity of the peror firm responsible for lacceptthe hospital insurance plan. :8. “The ability of hospital insurance plans to finance claims duriog an epidemic is. another/ important feature. Insurance companies protect their risks through ance and guarantee funds. It should be imperative that any locommunity hospital insurance ns with all its risks centered in opie locality be protected in a com- , pérable manner. | ‘Parenthetically, the insufance isiness is well established and emthousands of people who are in this field.
ARCH IS WIDENED "FOR THREE BANDITS
» = 3 MOUR, Ind, Sept. 20 (U. P). te Police and County authortoday widened a search for three bandits who donned chaufSur's uniforms, attached a siren to i car and robbed a truck of 00 in cigarets early yesterday. : Horina, 42, of Louisville, 1 he was bound and left r “the truck when the bandits drove way. He escaped, he told police, } forcing ing 2 hole through the roof
Siresicars had been operating at Wasington and Illinois Sts. for 40 years when this picture of the intersection was taken in 1904. To|day the horses are gone, the buildings have changed, but the cars are {still doing business at the same old stand.
POLICY WHEEL LOST IN RAID
37 Arrested as Police Enter Vermont St. Establishment.
Police today sought a policy wheel ‘that vanished last night as they raided a place in the 200 block, W. Vermont St., and arrested 37 on gambling charges. The raid, conducted after a special investigation into Indianapolis’ “policy racket” on orders of Police Chief Michael Morrissey, was under supervision of Detective Ferdinand Holt. When he and Sergt. Otis Baker went to count money found in the raid, a wheel, on which the alleged policy was determined, was taken from the place, together with some of the alleged| policy slips.
Produces Wheel
The police entered the fourthfloor place and reported that Eather Edelem, 39, of 2132 Boulevard Place, said he would produce the wheel if police would arrest only him. . - He produced the wheel, they said, together with a cigar box of money and some slips. At that time a Negro politician entered the hall and demanded that police count the money before taking it to Police Headquarters.
Count Money
Detective Holt and Sergt. Baker counted the money in the presence of the political leader, and when they turned to get the wheel and slips found the wheel and some of the slips were gone. They charged Edelem with operating a lottery and gift enterprise and keeping a gaming house. They charged four others with visiting and keeping a gaming house; 21 with visiting a gaming house, and 11 with visiting and gaming.
PICKETING IN MILK STRIKE RES] RESTRAINED
demporary order restraining ston Polk Milk Co. drivers from secondary picketing was issued yesterday by Judge Herbert Spencer, Superior Court Room 2 Petition for the injunction was filed by Gustave Irrgang, proprietor of the Irrgang Food Market, 3621 E. Michigan St. Mr. Irrgang set out in his complaint that three union members were causing his store to be picketed. Pickets appeared at his store Sept. 21, the complaint said, displaying signs reading: “Do Not Buy Polk’s Milk.” There will be a hearing on the order Tuesday.
ing our so-called Neutrality Act, and assert their strong belief that the vital interests of the United States demand immediate repeal of the arms embargo, and further, that the risks involved in doing so are slight indeed compared to the risks in not doing so. “Because of the extreme {mportance of this non-pagtisan question it is urged that those who hold similar views express them to their Congressmen.” The statement was signed by the following: Joseph J. Daniels, Clarence E. Merrell, Roy Falvey, Hugh McK. Landon, Judge Herbert E. Wilson, Clarence Keehn, Dr. W. L. Wright, D. L. Chambers, Frank C. Dailey, George S. Dailey, Frank W. Quinn, Thomas Stevenson. D. J. McVey, Frank Lewis, Charles L. Reid, Warrack Wallace, Garrett Olds, Alex Clark, Howard C. Creer, Donald Jameson, Ralph Henderson, Herman ©. Wolff," A." M.® McVie, T. E. Killila, James Crawford, Howard Travis, Ernest Baltzell, Perry O’Neal, D. L. Chambers Jr. R. W. Hobson, R. W. McDowell, James B. Minor, Thomas D. Sheerin, Howard T. Averitt, Walter P. Ellis,- J. H. Copeland, Ralph Henderson, Kenneth Ogle, Ralph R. Kemp, James H. Brayton, Stanley Couler, John G. Coulter, Dr. Thomas L. Sullivan, John K. Ruckelshaus. Austin Clifford, A. C. Sinclair, Andrew H. Hepburn, Julius Birge, Carl E. Eveleigh, Ralph F. Thompson, Rowland Allen, Edward L. Mayer and Dr. Jean Milner.
Edict of Chief Misses Home
GREENCASTLE, Ind., Sept. 30 (U. P.).—Police Chief Ed Maddox wasn’t sure today whether college students lean toward official advice or not. He warned DePauw University students against carrying any considerable cash in their pockets or leaving sums of money in rooms or lockers.
Yesterday a student called to inform him $14 was stolen from her gymnasium locker. The caller was Juel Maddox, his daughter, a
sophomore.
The Indiana Political Scene—
McHale Calls Halt in McNutt Campaign Until Congress Settles Neutrality Issue
By NOBLE REED
ACTIVE CAMPAIGNING will be postponed by the McNutt-for-Pres-ident headquarters until the present neutrality legislation issue is settled in Congress, Frank McHale, campaign manager, announced today. Mr. McHale had scheduled a sec-
ond tour of states during October | § in the interests of presenting Paul
V. McNutt as the Indiana “favorite son” for the Democratic Presidential nomination. “The tour will be postponed indefinitely or at least until neutrality legislation is passed by Congress, » the campaign manager said. “Campaigning during the debate in Congress would bring pressure from party groups for our stand on neutrality legislation and that is an issue on which we necessarily will not make a stand,” he said. “There may be no neutrality issue before the public in 1940.” : The states included in the next tour by Mr. McHale will include: Missouri, Kansag, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Louisiana. He recently completed a tour of the northwestern states, including California.
AN INDIANA REPUBLICAN delegation headed by State Chair-. man Arch N. Bobbitt went to Vienna, Ill, today to attend a fourstate G. O. P. conference, apparently to form a bloc of delegates in
h. the Rational convention next year,
es Bedwell . . . candidate for Congress.
States to be represented are Indiana, Illinois, Kentucky and Missouri. . Some doubts have been expressed however, on the harmony possibility of such a combine since U. S. Senator Robert Taft (R. Ohio) and Homer “E. Capehart, Washington,
Ind., are scheduled to headline the speaking program tonight. Both
This photograph is from the files of the Ynidianapoils Railways, which will celebrate the 75th anniversary of the City’s transportation
system Tuesday. It was on Oct. 3,
1864, that the first mule-drawn car
came up Illinois St. from the Union Station.
Non-Partisan-Group Here Favors Arms Ban Repeal
Several Indianapolis Republicans and Democrats today said they consider the so-called Neutrality Act a non-partisan issue and that they favor repeal of the arms embargo. A letter, sent to newspapers and to Congressmen, read: ' “The undersigned Republicans and Democrats note with gratification the clear-cut stand taken by the League of Women Voters concern-
BULLITT RAPS NAZI COMMENT
Assails \ierpretation of His Phone Conversation With Biddle.
PARIS, Sept. 30 (U. P.).—William
C. Bullitt, United States Ambas-|C%
sador to France, yesterday denied a German interpretation of a telephone conversation he had with A. J. Drexle 'Biddle, Ambassador to Poland, when: . the latter was .in Czernowitz (Cernauti), Rumania, in flight from Warsaw. Publication of the purported text of the conversation, said to have taken palce Sept. 17, included a request by Mr. Bullitt that Mr. Biddle “use your imagination” in reporting details of the German invasion to President Roosevelt and Secretary of State Cordell Hull, for submission to Congress in neutrality discussions. Mr, Bullitt assailed the German radio statements as “propaganda” and said they had no other basis in fact than this: “Mr. Biddle’s telegrams to Washington on the bombardments from the air of his villa near Warsaw and the bombardments of him and other members of his embassy staff as they and members of the diplomatic corps moved their official residences through Poland and the bombardments of civilian populations of Poland, had been so badly garbled in transit to Washington that the Department of State had been unable to obtain a clear idea of what was happening.”
DIES AT HOSPITAL HERE
Mrs. Martha Dennis, 65, of Noblesville, died today at St. Francis Hospital. She was brought here last night for treatment of an ess from which she had been suffering
for several days.
have been declared candidates for he G. O. P. Presidential nominaon.
WITH INDIANA DEMOCRATIC leaders declared in a deadlock over candidates for the gubernatorial nomination next year, party workers ‘are turning their attention to the task of recapturing at least three of the five congressional districts lost to Republicans in 1938. These are the Seventh, Tenth and Fifth Districts. In the Seventh District where Rep. Gerald Landis, Republican, won last year with a following of Townsend old age pentsioners, at least three Democratic candidates are being boomed for Congress. They include State Senator Charles Bedwell, of Sullivan; Professor Preston Foster, of Indiana University and Judge Donald Rogers, of the Monroe Circuit Court. Party leaders have expressed confidence of in this district next year. In the Tenth District, Judge Claude Ball, of Muncie; Mrs. Emery Scholl, of ‘Connersville and Samuel | +, Trabue, Rushville, former Public Service Commission member, are
+ Raymond Springer, of Con twice a G. O. P. candidate for Govwas elected last year. ‘ In Be Fifth District, George Wolf, of Peru, is being groomed for
the Somination to rus against Re, Forest Harness (R. Kokomo).
being mentioned for the race. Rep.|
LIONS PREPARE 20-ACT SHOW
40 Concerns Co-operating In Ticket Sales of Charity Fete.
Arrangements for a 20-act program lasting two hours is expected to be completed by the end of next week for the Lions Club All-Charity show Wednesday night, Oct. 25, at the Butler Fieldhouse. Co-operating in ticket sales are 40 concerns. Five of those in charge of ticket sales for these concerns are Ruth Yunghans, U. S. Rubber Products, Inc.; Eloise Sheetz, Fame Laundry; Dorothea M. Pyle, Indianapolis Power & Light Co.; Miss K. Pavlak, RCA Manufacturing Co., and Joyce Bogard, E. C. Atkins &
Frank N. Daniel is entertainment committee chairman, assisted by R. G. Hesseldenz, Albert :O. Evans, Walter L. Shirley and L. G. FerguBo ght Bd Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan is to crown a “perfect baby,” to be selected in the contest preceding. the show. He also is to distribute awards and crown the girl representing the organization selling the most tickets. Louie Lowe’s orchestra is to play for dancing and Bob McKittrick’s orchestra for the show. The Butler University band and majorettes are to open the performance. Officials expect an attendance of 15,000. Profits will be used for the benefit. of under-privileged and blind children in Marion County. As the show is being assembled, Lion’s Club executives are making final preparations for the ‘clinic at the Claypool Hotel to select the perfect Marion County baby:
4 NAZI ARISTOCRATS DIE ON EAST FRONT
BERLIN, Sept. 30 (U. P.),—The Polish campaign cost the fives of at least four of Germany's leading aristocrats. They are: Prince Oskar Jr. of Prussia, eldest son of the fifth son of former Kaiser Wilhelm, 24-year-old lieutenant in the 51st Germany. mfantry. The son of Baron Ernst von Weizsaecker, German Secretary of State. 3 Col. Gen. Werner von Pritsch, former commander-in-chief of the Army, who “died in action before Warsaw” Sept. 22. Victor, 23-year-old heritary prince of Ratibor and Corvey, heir to one of Germany's greatest estates. A French casualty on Germany’s Western Front was, Lieut. Louis Paul Deschanel, 30, son of the former French president, Paul Deschanel.
GOSHEN LABOR CASE APPEALED TO COURT
CHICAGO, Sept. 30 (U. P.).—The National Labor Relations Board began action today in the Circuit Court of Appeals to force the Goshen Rubber & Manufacturing Co., Goshen, Ind., to obey an order issued last March 28 in connection with a labor dispute hearing. “The NLRB filed a petition in review seeking enforcement of the order's mandates that the company cease discouraging membership in the United Rubber Workers of erica, a C. I. O. affiliate, halt alleged = discriminations against union members and that the company reinstate two union members, and: reimburse them for wages lost during the period of suspension.
NAVY IMPOSES SECRECY WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (U. P.).
'—The' Navy imposed secrecy. today on the movement of scores of war-
ficiency of its neutrality patrols and thwart the work of sabotage agents.
ships in an effort to tighten ef-|
so | AS NEW CHOICE
FOR COLLECTOR
[observer Sees Doghouse’
For Greenlee if Local Banker Is’ Ghose. y
|ators Frederick VanNuys and Bren ; expected to: get|| together shortly to recommend Wil-|
man Minton are
liam Storen (Indianapolis banker) for the Internal Revenue Collectorship post at Indianapolis. This
{will leave Pleas Greenlee in the po-
litical doghofise, since he tried and failed to’ Yeplace, Will Smith in that
Commenting on this situation; one of the Democrats here said that he thought Pleas could “take it.” “Being in the doghouse wouldn't be bad anyway, if it is like the one Pleas has on his new place at Shelbyville,” he pointed .out. “For that
doghouse cost $5000.”
2 ” ” WHEN THE SPECIAL session of
i Congress opened last Monday, Rev.
ZeBarney T. Phillips, Senate Chaplain, offered a prayer which began: “O God of Love, Lord of our unrecorded days, who standest at the, doors of desire and obedience; shame us with the sense or our misspent efforts in which fret and strain have but wrought confusion.” . 3 2 ” Since the special session was called by President Roosevelt to rectify what he considers mistakes in the Neutrality Law, which he sought to change at the regular session, the last line quoted above could be interpreted with considerable political significance. Which recalled among old-time Hoosiers here the Indiana Senate in pre-prohibition days when Lieutenant Governor William P. O’Neill was presiding. A state dry law was up for debate and one of the visiting ministers was called upon to say the opening prayer. He injected a long plea for God to ‘give the solons light so they would support the dry bill. Midway in this passage, however, Lieutenant Governor O’Neill brought down the gavel with’ a great ‘bang and ruled the preacher out of order. “We want no propaganda in the prayers,” he said. 2 2 8
SOME OF THE Republicans who returned from the Indianapolis rally brought back a story, which they said was quite generally whispered out there, to the effect that the G. O. P. editors indorsed
“Favorite Son” presidential candidate with the distinct understanding that he would decline the role. They also reported that Mr. Capehart checked out on a plan concocted by Jim Watson to make him (Capehart) Republican state chair man; Robert W. Lyons, national committeeman, and . Mr. Watsen himself the senatorial nominee. 2 ” s 3 It seems to be conc&ded here that Raymond E. Willis, the Angola editor who claims to have been counted out in the 1938 Senate race, will be renominated and run against Senator Minton (D. Ind.).
2 ” 2
MEMBERS OF THE Washington Press Gallery this week received a release ‘from McNutt for President Headquarters in Indianapolis headlined “McNutt te Be Nominated Is Prediction. of Manager.” gThere follows a two-column story about Frank M. McHale's Western trip, adorned by a handsome picture of the McNutt campaign manager. According to the text, Prospector McHale found plenty of. McNutt for President gold in “them thar West-
-lern hills.”
8 8 5
W. A. S. DOUGLAS, the veteran journalist whose column “Rollin’ Along” appears in the Patterson papers here, toured through Indiana recently and found ample material for a story down in Salem. “The mest prominent, beloved and respected citizen of Salem, Washington County, Indiana, is not, as you might well suppose, the banker, the leading merchant, the Circuit Judge, one of the doctors or one of the lawyers,” Mr. Douglas repo “He is the whistle-tooter at the cabinet works, Del Straine, fiftyish, gnarled, dryly humorous and a firm believer in the theory that
in noise—the more noise the more joy—and vice versa.”
Then follows the story of Del and the whistle and just what each toot means to the town.
8 = #
CHAIRMAN ARCH N. BOBBITT of the Republican State Committee wrote Rep. Clfirles A. Halleck, dean of the Indiana G. O. P. Congressmen, a letter of congratulation on his backing Alfred M. Landon’s proposal for President Roosevelt to check-out now on a third term. He particularly agreed with Rep. Halleck that the time has not yet arrived in this country when the two-party system of American Government should be abandoned. :
START POSITIONWARD ENTER OCTOBER 2....
Business is definitely on the up-grade. dependable reor s and graphs show this. ccordingly, remands for welltrained stenographers, secretaries and accountants are increasing. In some types, there's a shortage Dow. So, .I1 young ng women vho are
fons
men Lh to” prom. g ente: upo im;
. ring i nial tra i ro aie, slemien t.
odin Sluis Collogs
LEER s
s. Ri 0
Homer E. Capehart as Indiana’s|
| said.
all joy should find its expression.
William Storen eo ON politioal horizon.
URGES SALE OF BETTER ER APPLES
Society Asks Gr Growers to Offer Only High Grades + To Housewives.
Indiana housewives will be offered only. the best apples from Hoosierdom’s orchards, according to plans of ‘an Indiana Horticultural Society executive committee which met yesterday at ‘the Hotel Lincoln. Monroe McCown, Purdue University extension horticulturist, said the apple crop in the state is estimated at one million bushels and is of unusually good quality “In fact,” he said, “it is one of the finest apple crops ever grown in the state.” The committee, headed by L. V. Dowd of Denver, Ind., plans to send letters to apple growers asking them not to sell the poorer quality apples but. use them in some way other than disposing of them cn the retail market. “By so doing,” Mr. McCown said, “the consumer will get the best product. and ultimately ‘the apple growers will ‘benefit, too.”
CALLS EMBARGO STAND ‘GESTURE’
Gen. Butler Says Says F. D. R. Neutrality Position Is ‘About Face.’
FRENCH LICK, Ind., Sept. 30 (U. P.).—The Administration drive toward repeal of the arms embargo is simply a political gesture aimed -at victory in the 1940 election, Smedley D. Butler, retired Marine Corps general, told members of the Indiana
Electric Association here last night.
' “The President may not want war but he does want us to get all the trade we can without bloodshed,” he “But the World War taught us you cannot deal in blood money without getting smeared. We got into that war because the Allies owed us several billion dollars and were going to get licked so we went across to save our investment.” He praised the present neutrality law and called the President's stand an “about-face.” i “I don’t believe they'll shoot at ‘each other over there unless we lift the arms embargo,” he asserted. He classed the CAA program to train college students as aviators as a “clever move to create the impression of an emergency so that Administration can cover up our own political situation and stay in the saddle.
CAB DRIVER ROBBED; «STORE, AUTO LOOTED
Charles Harney, 3831 N. Layman Ave., reported that a fare he picked up in his cab last night robbed him of $4.65. P. J. Bulger reported that someone entered his grocery at 3811 Broadway and took $10 in cash. Mrs. B. E. Bucknian, 3609 Balsam Ave. said someone entered her parked car at 139 W. Washington St., and stole merchandise valued at
Phin TAS
South American Countries
“Balk on Definition of Contraband.
\ By THOMAS STOKES Special Writer % ANAT CITY, Sept. 30.—The
tdesire of South American countries, especially Argentina, Chile - and -
Uruguay, to capitalize every ad-
| vantage from war trade, is slowing
down .the inter-American conference of foreign ministers. Adjourns
has been delayed until next week.
band. Argentina and Uruguay propose that foodstuffs for civilians and raw material: not for war purposes be exempted from contraband lists, while Chile goes a tsep further, demanding that contraband include only “articles destined specifically to be used for military purposes.” U. S. Undersecretary ‘of State Sumner Welles is believed to'be sup~ porting the Argentina-Uruguay posi- , but it is said that he refuses ' to go along with Chile, which in recent years has done a flourishing business with Europe in nitrates, wool, hides, beeswax, agricultural products, fresh and dried fruits, with Germany a leading customer.
~ Blockade Is Felt
The voluminous trade which - these three countries have built up with Germany has been all but destroyed by the British blockade. Their domestic economy, already affected by a general depression, re-. quires an intense effort to make up for the trade loss due to war. That * explains their attempt here to get a liberal interpretation in the conference declaration. Britain’s contraband poses a deélicate problem for Mr. Welles, since it is virtually identical to the American contraband list during the World War. The United States as yet has not taken any action on the British contraband, although Secretary of State Cordell Hull, in a recent statement, reserved for {the United States all neutral and
tional law. The concept of cash-and-carry and no loans to belligerents, accepted as a fundamental of the United States’ policy in the current deliberations of the Senate, is in striking “contrast to the general Latin American attitude. Argentina’s proposal to the conference here would permit the extension of credits to purchasers of foodstuffs and raw materials, wherever the laws of any American republic authorize business on that basis.
U. . Support Sought
The manifest co-operation of Latin American countries with the United States on ifs revolutionary. proposal for the extension of territorial waters evidently is inspired by the desire to get the United
terpretation of legitimate war trade,
merce. In some respects acquiescence in: the creation of the proposed . big neutral zone, which the U. S. Navy would - help . patrol, is quite a departure for South American countries, which are very jealous of their rights. Final approval of the neutral zone plan seems assured. Mr, Welles has been especially active on this issue. Likewise approval is expected of -the detailed regulations and precautions which have been drafted and embodied in a general neutrality declaration. The economic subcommittee has completed the draft of another declaration, proposing numerous avenues for the development of inter-American trade. This, too, is ready for final and favorable conference action.:
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